notes
on some local connectors - inquiries from studnt union club leaders welcome rsvp isabealla@uancknowledgedgiant.com mark lives near lincoln center in NY and
has already had lunch with amy...

he is quite busy in oxford for 3 weeks but the un is definitely his biggest platform if there is anyone
there serious about having 17 goals but less than 10$ funding- his idea sgd economic zones is compatible with
guterres-jinping idea to plant a youth zone at every border belt road newly connects especially those previously refugees

i have also introduced amy to matthew bishop who for
20 years edited what billionaires do at the economist but now works in ny for rockefeller foundation and their italian retreat
where they arrange for academics to have quiet sabaticals; in fact matthew and john micklethwait now at bloomberg were the
youth team my father backed in 1989 but they dont like to be reminded of that; nor apparently do friends of prince charles
like to be reminded that my father wrote ;prince charles speeches celebrating the ;partnership of japan and uk when it was
still unfashionable to partner the rest of the east's biggest enemy from world war 2- nor does romano prodi like to
be reminded that in 1976 he was the main european translator of my father's xmas survey entrepreneurial revolution Norman Macrae : Books & Surveys at The Economist which argued that only mapping sme value chain globalisation could be sustainable

Norman Macrae : Books & Surveys at The Economist

41st year of celebrating
return of china as central kingdom.. macrae dictionary of end poverty economics Worldw...

billy i am still struggling with finding one c100 person who
gets it in spite of the first 2 founders celebrating cultural bridges of architecture and music and your friend being the
main host of aiib president jin tour of silicon valley (aiib mumbai 2018 is taking place this weekend as i write this)-
in terms of population numbers 3 billion people of china and south asia remains the biggest sustainability challenge of all
- i strongly advise people to study why jack ma together with brac.tv - a guide to collaboration's best for the world organisations has girls greatest solutions to sustainability - if we fail to celebrate that now all other belt roads progress will
go lout of sync and the multipliers of bottom up fintech and edutech will never be mapped the way girls need empowered

brac.tv - a guide to collaboration's best for the
world organisations

the head of the general assembly to the annual event in september is the one who congratulated mark as offering bigger idea than 40 other speakers including jeffrey sachs and aiib senior person in indonesia; this year
the world bank october summit is in indonesia and its annual report is on livelihoods- so there are so many dots to be connected
for saving the human species but as always they need to be people who collaborate with mark and others ideas not those
who wish to sell other agenda that confuse the hell out of youth =changing education because in the west we dont organise
moocs so students can choose which sustainability solutions they want to replicate- china already does organise moocs "outside
the classroom" in this way around the chief editor of www.aliresearch.com at tsinghua who amy has met and who is coming
to meet my friends in bangladesh

the next head of the un general
assembly comes from ecuador- fortunately i met a former president of ecuador at an iqbal quadir event so will try me best
to linkin mark

xmore at Economist affilates illustrated including EconomistDiary.com-co-blogging the 7 summits to be at up to Maolympics.com in 2020 if you value turning summit wisdom into MOOCs and other free university education

part 2 world series : based on youth journalism first 100
moving parts ofalibabauni.com

jottings leapfrog innovation is the socially most valuable kind, and ever more critical if today's umnder 30s are to be the sustainability
generation = typically a whole society that never enjoyed a resource - eg electricity grids - leapfrogs by having access to
eg microsolar- marketing of gtraditional innovations usually ebcounters costlyu chalenge of getting known and tried indiv\idual
by individual- leapfroging typically inmvolves a digital platform or a physical infrastructure where successful scaling happens
massivelyhere is nobel economist edmund phelps on why mass thriving could be the most valuable idea economists have
ever mediatedMy book mass flourishing argues that the surge in economic activity and the
emergence of widespread growth and prospertty observed duting the 1800s and the first half of the 1900s cannot be understood
solely as a consequence of scientific discoveries or chnages in government policies or institutions. An important factor,
often disregarded, was a change in attitudes, which finally led to the unleashing of entrepreneurs and in turn, innovation.
New or improved products and methods resulted in the spread of more rewarding work and a sense of flourishing - personal growthProfessort Lowrey's book (publ;ished with inside case stdies from AliResearch- THE
ALIBABA WAY, which describes and analyses the tremndous dynamism created by alibaba's ecosystem, exemplifies my basic themes
transported to china's modern age. Rather than the steam engine ol the nineteenth centiry . alibaba uses infomation tech to
enable mass innovation to flourish. Thanks to this technology "growing
by unleashing grassroots entrepreneurship" can be adapted by companies as a new strategy to win markets; it can also
become a nation's startegy to improves the l.ives of its peoplepotentiuaally
universal acceess to smart mobile phones offers mnany lepfroging opportuniuties- most of these are being discoverfed in experiements
with communities where mobile if the first phone (ie landline phones didnt exist) - bangladesh as well as china has become
a world leadding partnership[ spoace for expoeriments in leapfroging - partly because it was chonsen as early as 1996 for
massive experiments like vilage phone ofr the poorest and microsolar for the vilahges; partly becuae like china its revolution
since 1972 has been concerned with womenn lift up half the sky; ie envisioning a world in which womens cointributions and
lives are as great as men, and in fact greatesr as far as the wlorld's most urgent chalenges today linki the sustainability
of our speciues

but mentioning tehse ideas doesnt fully explain why so few innovators belive they canmassively
help others with leapfrog

new development Fintech & Ediead -will you help EconomistDiaryturn world leaders summits into MOOCS- repurpose markets of
health, energy, banking, edu for all

Sino-Scots & UNWomens ask: does the world's 3rd and fastest "exponentials" trading future history need to end in human exctinction?-
probably the 2020s and way the 5/7 of people living in east (especially 5/14 eastern women) resolve n korea and sino-india-bangladesh-asean
will tell ( lets hope washington dc, NY and berlin brussels keep their bad banking and bad media out of what needs to be the
most massive collaboration- the race for all girls' and boys' lives

ERworld.tv: Can the 3rd world trading future history value women hold up half the sky? EDIIB: Can we change EDucation and Infrastructure
Investment Banking to win-win network into a time when entrepreneurial innovation's creative destricution is 10 times faster
than ever before due to 1000 times more connectivity technoogy (2015 vs 1945)

STORY 2 1500-1946 colonisation destroys inclusive human development and win-win world trade mapping

what started spinning exponentially
in 1500- Northerners led by the English discovered 2 new worlds which they designed by ruling the waves with aggressive navies
and from 1700 with industrialisation built on extracting iron and carbon- a few G5 nations grew and grew up too times more
wealth; the majority of the world's people who lived in the east got the win-lose end of empire's trade and became underdeveloped
(eg without electriciuty grids or railroads or ownership of their own ports ). While the root cause of the world wars in the
west were countries like germany not having enough naval empires to extract carbon and iron to grow as fast as the other G$,
in the east the main issue to reconcile was end of colonisation and new era of win-win trades

Up to 1500 peoples progressively linked in around : med sea, china's east coast belt particularly
from beijing to shanghai and down the yangtze river to alibaba's great eastern terminal, and the great rivers of India's subcontinent; the overland relay called the silk road coonnected
the first two regional economies in the great trade of spices (needed to preserve food) and silk the most beautiful of crafts.
Both of these trades were high value per ounce (worth more than their weight in gold!)

Girls Asian Infrastructure Investment Branding welcomes you to valuing girls hold up half the sky as the only
logical way that investment in youth as the sustainability goals generation can possibly connect in time for nature and human
race to support each other Linkedin UNwomensSee all articles

Do you have an urgency* problem in
trusting that these 3 ideas are core to whether the human species is sustainable:

Valuing girls' livelihoods as much as boys

Understanding risk to girls
safety and happiness of bureaucratic monopoly of classroom education

Exploring how the
intergeneration economic miracles of china and Bangladesh since 1971 provide essential clues to women hold up half the sky

At the time that men were racing to the moon over a tenth of the peoples living on the lands now known as China and
Bangladesh were dying of starvation. Mothers and children were disproportionately lost. Inconvenient Truth for English speaking men: history’s root cause of this exponential and geo-cultural
disaster was the way about four centuries of the British Empire had colonized trading
routes between East and West. More…......................................................................................................

Timelines 1748 AND ALL THAT:
Adam Smith values designing community-markets around trust-flows; 1776 BREXIT: Adam begs UK to enter
a world trade system freeing USA to grow win-wins further than a small island nation can rule over ; instead 1776 sees declaration
of transatlantic independence; 1843 Diaspora Scot James Wilson starts up The Economist: Goal 1 end famine
across Queen Victoria's 4 home nations;Goal 2 end zero-sum Empire (result in 1860 James dies of diarrhea in Kolcata, British
Empire's badwill trade of Opium causes China to end trading with world for over a century ... -click to after world war
2 THE ECONOMISTS NORMAN MACRAE's STORY : exponential geographical growth (up or down) entered post-colonial and post-industrial
ages - we Imagineer this depending: on growing people (education) and clean energy access to all ,mapping ports (on coastal
BELTS), (railROADS and pipes) and then other transport ; previously millennium 2 was industrial 1700-1946 and pre-industrial#theeconomist : story of chris.macae@yahoo.co.uk during my working life (1972 to date) communications tech made
financial networking 1000 times faster, ads 1000 times addictive, but except in china (see Ma 12) & bangladesh, jobs-education has not started to be 1 times smarter.....................................................................................................................................

Do economists understand each olther and does
it matter? Well. it matters see last chapter of keynes general theory "increasingly economists rule over what futures
will be possible for a plac's next generation..the mathematican john von neumann observed : economists are not numerate mathematically
whenever they fail to topline the system assumptions their models rule over. isabella@unacknowledgedgiant.com So please tell
us what else did the world's wisest economiests clarify- therefore economists should take hippocratic oath to design systems
around 2 connecetd goals end poverty, improive livelihhod opportunities for next generation out of each community; smith valued
free markets as those where community audited trust of every merchnat; and advised the uk to welcome usa as a bigger maket
to trade with instead of trying to colonise; marx was concerned with who owns the earth/land - more......................................................................................................................................

Special Thanks to tech friends and education alumni of CAIIB.org and AIIBnews Gaiib.com-

from chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk brand reality memo to curtis/burnett- why not apprentice tv with first
100 national leaders partnering Xi Jinping and JMa in planting DAMO hubs at every border opened up by belt road 123 imagineering wherever old borders become a new gateway

Imagine 40 peaceful win-win world trade routes of entreprenurial women youth and community for all markets such as health, sports,
green energy and vocational edutech -who would be first male (&..) leaders to be most trusted;
which top 40 Belt Road trading routes could be mapped?

our future history on death of distance in 1984 forecast that 2005-2015 would be humanity's
most critical decade irreversibly impacting sustainability. In 1984, he wrote "The 2024 Report: a future history of the
next 40 years". It was the first book to: provide readers with a brainstorming journey of what people in an internetworking
world might do, and predict that a new economy would emerge with revolutionary new productivity and social benefits enjoyed
by all who interacted in a net-connected world. In this book, he wrote: "Eventually books, files, television programmes,
computer information and telecommunications will merge. We'll have this portable object which is a television screen with
first a typewriter, later a voice activator attached. Afterwards it will be miniaturised so that your personal access instrument
can be carried in your buttonhole, but there will be these cheap terminals around everywhere, more widely than telephones
of 1984."

Examples of belt road trade policies that are sustainability
positive (note climate and other crises spun by eg 1946-constitutions not able to legislate innovation in local to global
policy needed in age of 1000 times more connectivuty tech )

Other
solutions driven by professional transparnecy of market sector or place leadership

Mapping at least 12 win-win trading routes "Belt Roads" -Silk west to middle
east through suez to med sea; Silk West from Bangladesh (girl empowerment world number2 ) to asean and china golden coastal
belt of jobs creation; with india two fifth of world people; with china express train to west europe; up the polar belt road
with arctic univeristy; with japan, korea and main diaspora superports; with africa, with latin america; with canada, pro-youth
us states; through sectors such as education belt road and green belt road and health belt road; and cultural belt road; smart nedia belt road...

Engaging over 60 national leaders in new
development banking projects often in win-win clusters and around dedicated new universities

Understand 3 billion new
jobs need to be co-created by worldwide youth if they are to be the sustainability generation

Validates which technology
(fin tech and edutech) innovators are most massively creating, connecting what

Prepared to re-examine all the ways in
which gdp is the wrong measure especially for any nation whose sustainability culture that lives up to women lift up half
the sky

African
New Development banking -ADB could become this eg if mandela not zuma values inspire africa from 2018 on - more to watch

silk
belt road bank - various structures concerned with reconciling borders of nations critical to the southern belt of eurasia
much of which british raj dominated until world war 2 -previously up to 1500s the med sea facing nations and china belt nations
enjoyed the most positive win-win trades- how did 20th c end up with med sea nations borders becoming the biggest refugee
and armed crises

baiib.org informal british american iib asks how can english lnguage banking reform to connect positively with edu and banking
need of under 30s becoming sustainability generation by 2030

new olympicsbanking - infpormal network auding wheher tokyo and other greatest communities for ll expos chnage the value chian of superports
and global celebrations back to sustainability

nomination of new development education and banking welcome
- isabella@unacknowledgedgiant.com

join 40 year debate of thie 1984 essay on new development bankingchapter 6 ...more

Our
next silicon valley Belt Road trainng session is on 4 May 2018 - typical exercises if Elon Musk's supetrain works how long will it take to go up us west belt from silicon valley across bering tunnel down to tsinghua
uni's epicentre of 5 million startups - answer under 16 hours ; 16-30 hours over 30 hours; True or False the busiest superport
in america's by 2028 is most likely to be on coast of Mexico .... Discuss whether AliBaba's sponsorship of Olympics Tokyo-Paris-La will increase or decrease the extreme value of superstars -more BRI.school How Bangladesh Grows with China/Asian Giants

Arnold Fu, founder, chairman and CEO of Hujiang, is a young Chinese
man who was born in a small town of Lianyungang City, Jiangsu province in 1979. He has never dreamed of becoming
a millionaire. Instead, he hopes to help as many people as he can. As a notable young entrepreneur and one of the most successful
student-turned businessmen in China, Hujiang has become China’s EdTech Unicorn company with valuation over 1 billion
USD and has served more than 150 million users, including 120 million mobile subscribers. As for Mr. Fu, online
education is crucial to promoting fair education across the board by creating more equal access to educational resources,
and he has adhered to this ideal for over 10 years. Fu has long been devoted to an educational charity program called the
Hu+(Hujia) Project. Initiated by his company, Hujiang EdTech, this project aims to change the traditional education model
through the use of internet technology. The Hu+ Project both improves and optimizes the sharing of high-quality educational
resources. Under his leadership, Hujiang’s mission is to make education easier, fairer and more enjoyable!

Girls
and community capacity audits of education's opportunity or threat to diverse contexts of 17 SDG deadlines

Other
"tech" solutions

Place & logistics tech of things

place & logistics thech of
humans

Whats the technology's vision- purpose by new configurations of markets

Examples of belt roadtrade policies that are sustainability positive (note climate and other crises spun by eg 1946-constitutions not able to legislate
innovation in local to global policy needed in age of 1000 times more connectivuty tech )

Other
solutions driven by professional transparnecy of market sector or place leadership

updates on sino-english publication partnbership of World Record Jobs Creators - help LINKIN 100 best places of youth jobs creation

what would world miss without jinping & guterres - redesigning banking
to connect youth livelihoods with development goals by segmenting which national leaders wish to connect this - clustering
leaders around regional and other (eg innovation maps eg green)

what would world miss without jinping and sir
fazle abed - deepest girls and education solutions to sustainability goals

what would world miss without jinping and
pope francis- segmenting leaders with responsibility for a fift or more of world's sustainability - eg jining confucians,
pope francis franciscan catholics

what would world miss without jinping and jack ma- techoinlogy solutions applying
big data small - coobected by types of marek - eg ecommerce can reach consumer goods markets and help train 750 million chiense
consumers to be fussiest middle class; jack ma aims to test other (social community for all marjets) that can be connected
by olympics and superstar celebrities for sustainability

it seems to me
the same belt road logics that have built the east's world defining economic and ecological futures round chinese superports
and supertrains (including straight line pipes, cables etc) and digital - now depend on mexico growing the next big superport
- one whose location on approximately hong kong's latitude could fit evolution as the biggest port on the whole of americas
continent

jack ma's gateway17 and I have long known camilo as probably wall street's and columbia-engineering schools only end poverty fund
for latin america- apologies if this idea seems to be a dream - is there some alternative beyond the media and trump nightmare
that americas seems trapped in?

if china and other
sustainability goals partners invested in this with joyful belt road "rejuvenation for all" purpose it could end
money spent on walls and start to give the whole of latin america an equal footing in trading vision with usa whilst also
keeping LA to mexico corridors in the happy-peaceloving cultural entrepreneur space jack ma intends his olympics-tech journeys
(tokyo-beijing-pais-la) to bring to sectors that ecommerce alone cannot reach

it would
seem to me that the story is worth developing as LAIIB - ie latin american infrastructure investment banking and with president
of aiib speaking early may in silicon valley to the chinese america 100 network that a concept presentation circulated before
then would be useful and could be left behind:

at the
industrial revolution 4 hub in sanfrancisco that world economic forum's schwab

something that concerns me is selecting where to invest in a
regions missing superport is an unprecedented geopolitical gamechanger - i would prefer someone like jack ma to propose that
belt road imagineering is a new schools curriculum - in other words if belt road is mediated as sustainable communities game
for everyone to simulate we can create space for win-win trading games to be every 21st c community's right to engage in connectivity
as a 21st c human right not some vested interests and superpower wargame

I realise I am trying to frame something that imposes extraordinary future design challenges but isnt this
now inevetiable wherever belt road exchanges between nations spiral?

there's an interesting polar belt road big map to add after this weekend's summit at tufts -whats good for
superconnectivity about the arctic map is china russia america all sit down at a roundtable moderated by cool heads such as
finland and iceland

med
sea and european union -we have to say that the eu is the worst in valuing its border flows -its as if those in brusells dont
begin to understand the concept that china uses in looking to see trading route win-win corridors emerging through all its
13+ neighbors; ok we understand a lot is in flux; it could be that macron becomes one of the world's best road mapmakers but
who else in place eladership position is going to help him

south america really hasnt tried belt road mapping yet; probably it was the biggest accidental loser of
the cold war; back in 1946 why couldnt a largesly franciscan culture and usa have got on well - if it hadnt been for
cuba was there really a reason why the continent would have got divided up between poro- and anti-usa regimes; didnt it need
belt road mapping to linkin in to rest of world trade

Argentina G20 July 2018 is a great opportunity to explore whether the future will triple win trade between both Americas and China or whether
latin america should focus on win-win with china as usa hides behind a wall of protection - below some indicators of argentina's
china blossoming - more atchinathanks latin america

Former
Chilean ambassador to China, Fernando Reyes Matta,
says Latin American envoys to the next Ministerial Meeting of the

New

USA
i think te peoles get the need for belt rod mapping far more than the national politoicinas; the interesting thing is to see
where stte governors stand; and any state governor who does dast forward on belt road mapping will find a kindred soul in
canada- which is way ahead of the whole of the rest of the continent

India seems to have taken umbrage to how
well belt road mapping is bring back trade and peace from china to pakistan to wise parts of the eau to potentialy such adrican
landings as djibouti, ethiopia, kenya and potentially egypt - hopefully 2018 will chnage this- tere s so much oportunity if
india and china together take on the corridor through banglaldesh and myamar down to asean

It would look to
us as if east europe really gets belt road mapping but remains politically caught up -primarily because europe union
focused on betlr road of reunifying germany but was so busy internally organising that we cant even see if there is one person
at te eu overal responsibility for all its border win-wins - for sure that has become a hell of a job given which nations
beyond europe are now caught up as being refugee corridors- but did the EU even think ahead on this

since
the berlin wall fee. we would say russi has become a master player in belt road maps- not always with the win-win spirit of
china but one thing we cant imagibne russia doing is woirking againts any of china's belt road investments - in fact we see
russia as bring a positive dynamic to brics new development banking

we feel that wherever afrca is racing
to elect transparent leaders, belt and road mapping will unite such new africa; of course there are the problems of failed
nations and others need ing to tansition from old leaders who looked after number 1 and often didnt really value their peoples
(at least not at a small entrepreneur and jobs enriching educational level

asean superports actually started up the
whole regions win-win trading - in most countries cases I think they as purposeful in getting out beltroad mapping as china
is (the odd exeception notwithstanding)

china is extremely conscious of belt road with all of its neigbors-
yes there is a double win-win motive; the landlocked regkions of china will never catch up ith its coastal cities unless win-win
trade rourtes from land to see are designed in; but once China decided to come out from its great wall , that really meant
lets develop win-win relationships with all our neighbors so we never need any walls again

x

x

Belt Road is agreed by cpc19 OCT 2017 to be core to china dream and jinping goal to be a leading environmental
civilisation and worldwide partner in sustainability goals

2018 is the 50th year since my father's work Entrepreneurial Revolution at The Economist, impressed by imminent moon landing, recommended we change everything we thought we knew about economics
and education as the world invested 1000 times more in communications tech 2016 versus 1946. Something went very dismal with
markets of world trade from 1500 to 1946 - they enslaved, they colonised, they got locked into consuming carbon. For father,
who survived his last days as a tenager navigating bomber planes out of Burma, world war 2 was the end of that zero-sum game. During Q3 of 20th C, Japan, Korea,
Chinese Diaspora superports designed the first win-win trading markets for nearly half a millennium. Could 1000 times more
human connectivity return to people-centric economies (growing people through education) instead of just thing consumption, would we celebrate the return of over a billion productive
mainland Chinese (who had walled themselves off from Britain's disgusting opium trade) and could we parents invest in our
children searching out mother earth's renewable sources of energy and waste in time. Is it possible to imagine educators would
want to focus only on teaching sustainable knowhow?

What if the sustainability generation depends on trust that economists value learning as the greatest investment a nation
of parents can make in their children? what if girls are the sustainabilty generation's MVPs of productivity

audrey, sir fazle abed inspired girls lift
up half the sky, chinas geatest female storytellers and ... you and my family's friends have a chance in next
few months to link together those educators who value youth and their role as the first sustainability generation... when
it comes to edutech and fintechi am hopelessly and cross-culturally biassed

because my father norman macrae mediated keynsian end
poverty stories of economics at The Economist between 1948-1991 (eg japan rising 1962, death of distance 1972, asia
rising 1976, china rising 1977 ... von neumann biography 1995) and my first job at the uk's national development project
for computer assisted learning project after my ma in hawkins damtp cambridge occurred at same time as

brac was founded in bangladesh to
empower girls to build the worlds poorest and 8th largest nation bangladesh and

china was liberated

i
am hopelessly biassed towards livelihhood education eg half of youth will be unemployable unless we take education outside
classroom

100millionjobcrisis

Who Creates 60% of Jobs Worldwide?

http://www.grameensolutions.com CEO of Grameen Solutions,
Kazi Islam , reveals one of the world's best kept secr...

OUR CHANCE IN 2018

brac
- the number 1 network of how girls connect half of the world's future have asked us to ask eg audrey the world bank's youth
summits favorite coding for all - what topics should be presented at 3 educationaboveall summits

accra may 2018 organised by co-chair of un eminent committee which is also being interviewed
by london school of economics and other friends of jinping banks on intergenerational investment banking maps around the world
of ecommerce and industrial revolution 4 communities

united
nations general assembly - if you could present to guterres solutions livelihood education can help him with - what

march 2019 paris rehearsal of what climate and olympics celebrities
can help jinping with may 2019 belt rad summit 2, or jack ma future of ethical olympics and celebrities who know bottom up
girls networks

BEYOND BRETTON WOODS AID- new development investment funds are now being mapped across 11 Land Belts by 100 national leaders thanks to summits china began with the most populous developing nations whose 21st C needs to
develop peole out of sustainable communities-eg in june i was in korea listening to 3 days of bankers debates of www.aiib.org which world record jobs creators can make education pivotal toat www.aiEib.org

unfortunately wars of 20th c demonstrate that something unnaturaal dominated top-down leadership -maybe it was warring
over have enough carbon (even as countries that had grown biggest on carbon were often first to be self-sufficient or it may
be caused by other profesisonal practices- see our tweet today on why us congress risks missing last chance for english-spesaking
people to be valued as hi-trust and spacemaking world traders

we aim is to track which global market scerurs are being returned so that small enterprsie thrive and local communities
are sustainable

to this some common language helps:

thing consumptuion markets afre those where there is nothing
that smart custoners can differentiate

service markets come in 2 kinds - 1) where a service franchse team
deleivers the value to the customer or where it tyrns out that a thing market can now be segmented - eg in sourcing that thing
nobody was paid slave labour or had their health put at risks

we define a knowledge marjet as one where the supplier
doesnt grow unless the customer grows -this can be the most exciting market of all as its immediate win-win; some service
markets are absolutely essential if we alive today are to ebsure sustainbility of humanity but the value to the customer may
depoend on long-term compatible communalk interactions- it cant be measured in teh trascation only if we audit expoential
goodwill

=========================================

lets move staright on to markets - left are some "simple"
descriptions; right some marets that conect many of the markets on the left

we
define commerce as any good typically bought and sold through a shop

- digital (e) world leader
in changing this so smes can thrive is jack ma alibaba/taobao;

jack also leapfroged with finsnce so that alipay is
the world's leading financial services to

world expertsie is big data small analysis (BGS) - and in ecommerce this meant 1 haveing best
bds for logistic partners to linkin; 2) having alipay; 3 developing alicloud ...

alibaba is sponsoring
the olypmics toky 2020; paris 2024; la 2028; ma has said that he aims to leave sme comerce and finance markets in safe hands
of his 15 year long alumni and that asap he wants to fovus on some secturs he wants to turn back to happiness including media,
health, education and secturs that need to become green -part of media in jacks case is c0-histing huge live summits that
become turning points in mapping back sustainability youth - so jack parterd in china g20 2016 - see ; he has develkoped his
own gateway summit that inaudgirated with 2500 people in detroit; he looks for summits where world eladers meet but the cosequence
is new jobs rich curicula orvplatforms youth and postive world trade can link into

place publiuc servants
kead place markets

they can chnage these so smes flourish by ensuring nobody's trade is left out oif infratrsuture;
moreover in changing hiw infsratructure is funded large new projecst can include soft developemnts eg education alongisde
the infrastructire poipes; also exciting is the idea that waht will make a place a supoercituy through which everyne livelihhids
thirve is currently full of experiemntation - china has at least 20 supercity labs- testing at elst 100 projects with instruction
either fail fast or if successful massively share; in china maps make it clear which cities are also responsible for whuch
rurals; also because china has half a billion youth, china now defines value of all infrstructure projecst as inseparable
from progressing sustainability goals; for example the region around china has more to lost from climate conflict than any
other major region- hence china is staking on responsibiliuty for the sustrainabilouty gaps race with even more gousto than
usa took on moon race in 1960s;

we could think of each sustainabiliuty goals as a youth economy- and we know:

1
these markets need massive colabiration

2 no sustainability goal iscoplete unless soluytions are served for whoever
faces the very wirst of what that sgd is about - eg traoed in worst poverty, linked toworst education, in middle of a
war of humans or with climate earth-

so sustainability goals markets in a very real sense are one whgere
polace bioudaries can compound risks but that icab be abnither ap for big data small viurtual platforms- noire post-i=indutrial
revolution appears when there are no boundaries between people in sgharing life critical information - we have
so much work to do if we are to get there by 2030- soething must be terribly wrong bith with a country's eductirs
and its economists if with all this work to do its failing youth livelihoods- there is somethng very wrong with the eu at
the monent with well over 20% of youth seeing o livelihood oppotunitioeds in either greece or spain

what happens at the most exciting education revoilutions of Belt Road Imagineering

Reports
welcomed wherever belt road connects new borders- what youth hubs are designed to ebjoy the new cultural fusion? eg sharing
languages, extending silk roiad cultural entrepreneurship activities, accelerating new trades the way alibaba doies when it
links in communities previously excluded from trade

what happens among alumn if 3000 person masterclasses of
gateway17.com - how can we the people connect with humanising artificial intelligence and other IR4 explorations- eg DAMO
academy workdwide, schwab ir4 hub san franscisco, how do summits like annual new champions of china wef turn leadership ideas
presneted into new curricula studnets can engage in

with cppcc introducing radical debates on future of education-
what chnages can we report on?

also how do tranafsormations in commissions eg the chnage in focus of national
health commission lead to new

note also 3/15annual review of comsumer demands for corporates to do better - related china's emrging 750 million middle class need to demand
value transparency in markets like the west has never done if sustainability goals are to get on track

what are
the new livelihood results of the world largest gorls adolesecnt clubs linked in by partners of brac the world's largest ngo
and epiebtral laureate network of wise and its world summit series

what hapens to alumnis of the world
most affordable coding schools such as moringha

how doi the inclusion platforms of hujiang empowering 20000
live strateming assembles of teachers and students chnage educational possibilities

what blocks does worldpossible.org
find in duistributing the world's completely open learning tresources

can we connect together a newsleter of
new universities- being thise designed so futire of youth livelihoods blossoms and so that public servants empower every community
to thrive

how can we extend opportunities that tsinghua links its alumni to everywhere - tsinghua trains the public
servants most closely linked to the chiense dream - and is surrounded by the wprld's number 1 entrepreneur hub suburb

.................................................................

last week at estana the big news is that the shanghai cooperation organsiation now includes the major continental
crisis players:

to west of china (regions 2,3,7 ) - russia, india and the way the "stans" flow to the maritime
boders of the middle east

More than
anything else connectivity which you are born into by your family determines whether your life will be poor or fulfilling,
unsafe or safe

Poor

Potentially fulfilling

safe

Exponentially at risk of becoming
unsafe

Happy and free

unsafe

Miserable
and trapped

Not sustainable for
children and families

Between 2016 and 1946 the world invested 1000 times more in being digitally connected.

This
introduces 2 changes:

Increasingly livelihoods/communities having one of the two benefits of connectivity
don’t exist

Old variables that democracies told people they
should vote between are of lower order significance to community as well as individual wellbeing than whether your public
servants encourage everyone to be curious about how connectivity determines trade. If you read the last chapter of Keynes
book on systems you will find that he explains what futures will be possible fir children are exponentially locked in by the
“economic” systems that ruled over them. Paradoxically old quarterly metrics of economic strength conditioned
by amount of things produced and consumed do not help young people work on the cultures and trust-flows of being the sustainability
generation in the hyper connected world. Fintech and edutech are pivotal. And you could define the race we parents have placed
young oeopke in tday means that increasinglt the 2 options for life wont both exist – either nearly everyone will be
happy and free or nearly everyone will be miserable and trapped. Actually all of this was first foreseen to be the species
defing challenge of the early 21st C at the time of the moon landing

If
parents were to have invested in the media determinants of sustainability tere would need to be this sea change in education.
Most adolescents up would not be trapped in classrooms. Ironically the peoples in the middle of the moon race in the 1960s
are not those best positioned to mediate the sustainability goals race.

TO
BE OR NOT TO BE

Its still the case that everyone and every community needs to linkin. But
if your political partiues are arguing over whether you should wall yourself in from the rest of the world that is a sign
that your whol epolitical system neither values trust with openness and curiosity. The fifth of the world born Chinese happen
to have more experience in evolving with rapidly chnaing connectivity than anyone else. They know they need to share this
experience with peoples and cultures everywhere. They know they cannot just free themselves from colonisaion and over-carbonisation..
what every parent need to demand is schools everywhere hosts debates on the futures connected by coastela belts and overland
railroads [including the other pipelines such as telcoms cables, celan water, green energy that engineers can straight-line
across mother earth’s planet. Privided we are modest enough to listen to the agme rules the chiense have discovered,
this is a game every community can play. Its actually more critical than any other game you will see at the Olympics or world
cups. Shall we start mapping how to play it?

well growing youth's productivity takes models on different audit cycles than corporates
have spun round modern 90-day extraction spreadsheets - as first proved in norman macrae's 1954 book on the London Capital market- and when it comes to governments they are not
elected by youth so i have you ever any 2 leading tv-age political parties ever quarrel over investing in youth? Because bipolar
arties have no incentive even to consider such an issue (www.simpol.org list other issues national politicians are least able to progress )

Conclusion first surveyed in The Economist 1972 from which genre Entrepreneurial Revolution was founded: when people design
other economic models than 90-day corporates or bi-polarised government congreses, then you'll joyfully find the greatest investment opportunities ever - we will illustrate this in 10 markets coming soon

what is the greatest mathematical error in the world? Given Keynes findings: increasingly world is ruled only by economics - and so economics either designs or destroys
the futures peoples want most - the greatest mathematical error would be if 95% of the world's 10000 biggest organsaitions
were governed by metrics and rewards that were not designing futures peoples want most! When you watch the nightly news in
countries where tv is edited by views of big corporations or giovernments, analysis is false wherever it implies that the
economy is uilt only by corporations and government. A place's future growth is actually far more dependent on whether families/communities
are investing in their children's future productivities and whether natural assets are being sustained. Value multiplying
principles on how society build economies that are being torn assunder include- finding from London Capital Market -a place
can only grow over time if capital is striuctured from family's savings to in invest in that place's next generation's productivity.
Other longitudinal factors exaplining growth - the two greatest explainers of a places growth are caused by lengethening people's
healthy lifetimes and if historically a place has had a large precenhtage of underemployed people reducing this. It is observable
that Asia has grown in last few decades by using these principales and western nations' errant economic models is doing the
opposite. The way to cure this error is to map market by market in such a way that societies demand's and productivities are
fully integrated with other value exchnage coordinates- and the whole market is assessed around the purpose that peoples most
want it to be designing for the future. For more on the 2 branches of economics 1) designing, 2) destroying
futures peopels want most - click here 12 discuss. Pro-Youth Economics : Change agendas compiled over 40 years of Entrepreneurial Revolution dialogues devined
by asking what changes can link together 10 times greater economic potentiual of the net generation from past industrial age
potential of separated nations are here.

Sustsinability as a literacy every child had an education right to be curious about did not
start until after world war 2

The main lessons of world war 2 were:

we could not afford another world war:
Japan , and West Germany were set up as two of the first nations forbidden from entering an arms race. Their citizens had
a lot of work to do to rebuild from nothing but one advantage, unlike other highly edycated nations 20+% of their taxes would
not be spent on arms

there would be a need for all nations to go beyond colonisation ( an economic model where trade
of colonised nations is designed around wins the empire needs - ie trade is not being designed as win-wins and is not reguated
to prirtise assistane to communities previously excluded from electricity grids and other life develoing infrastructures)

in
1946 it was not globally recognised that mother earh would also need humans to go beyind carbonistaion - however it started
to be understood that nations should not get bigger by intentionally locking other nations into trades that plundred any nations
natural resources)

The year before the moon landing friends of The Economist's Norman Macrae annouced Entrepreeurial
REvolution as a more transparent way of designing 21st c sutsainability goals into how human beings integrtaed every community
into worldwide connectvity. The hypothesis of ER was the coming moon landing would cause a doubling of investments oin communications
technolgy every 7 yeras - ie a moores law which maintained over 70 years 2016 versus 1946 would mean spending(2**10)
over 1000 times more of peoples monet and time on coms tech. At the time of the moon landing the expoential consequncies of
the machine age industrial revolutioin which had begun slowly in 1700sEngland were that extremely uneven in opportunities
to innovate. Whilst a few thousnad computer networked peopels raced to the moon, over a thirfd of the world's people still
had no access to electricity grids. We can therefore define any real sustainability goal as valuing some kind of collabiration
(often eg educational) aheda of competition

collaborations
sdg1 requires - ending poverty requires every community to have access to electricity and other utliity grids, jobs-smart
education and infrastrucures freeing win-win trades

goal 2 end hunger requires every community to have local
food and water security, whatever conflocts with nature or man are surrounding that community

goal 3 basic health
for all should begin with enxuring that no mother or chimd dis before her time; the wporld should agree what last mile health
services are basically networked everywhere by ensuring each community has enough capacity to serve or link them in; we need
trasparent accounting of the world's most expensive types of health services- we shoiuld accept that some of these are being
trialled only by the suoer-rich but with the promise that a worldwide team of experts is constantly able to review where an
innovation can or must now be opened up for all. Many diseases inckuding all infectous dseases should not be siloised. For
example multi drig resisatnt tubercoluisis once belived to be too expensic=ve to treat everywhere is now known to: 1) be affordable
when treates by its own solution networks- so the most affirdable local health servants of MDTR are tose who are immune because
they have survived the disease; leaving MDTR untreated anywhere can create conditions that start or multiply other plagues..

Changing
education needs to be seen as the key to all sustainabiity goals in particular those that are lagging in local achevement.
If we cant design 1000 times more communicatiosn technolgy to share solutions that are ffirdably working somehwhere then both
our media and our education and our parnets investment sustems in chldren are flawed. It would be a pity for human race to
gothe way of the diodo through failing to chnage education these are the most exciting times to be alive

genfer equality - logically sustainability is not being a real goal anywherethat treats half of its people as having
less productive capability than its other half- china and bamgladesh since 1972 have becpoe world benchmatrks for valuing
women likft up half the sky- between them educatrs can find replicable community solutions youth need now to become the sustainability
generation...................

help resolve 100 ways west's big
bankers and edu bureaucrats are destroying our childrens futures context these are 3 billion new jobs that the under 30s
needed education to help them connect; here is what learning could have been like in 2024 according tothe stiry we have been
debating since our 1984 book published with The Economist - if you dont value these opportunituies for our children to be
the sustainability generation you probably wont want to help us its important to map what change 3 generation -grandparent
parents and children have been spun by- from the moment it was clear that man was gpoing to land on tghe moon our change scenario
has involved spending 1000 times more moiney and lifetimes on the technologies of connectyivy 2016 versus 1946 - in other
words a wotld where elarning trade are nodrerless and every national leader should remap what nations to win-win trade with
on tge assumption that not every big opportunity will be a geographicval neigbor yet equally the grfeaest rsik will be lettingt
neiboring countries fail as nations this system chnage is unprfecdented for any 3 generations to cope with - from this 2
systemic truthes follow 1 learning will need to be huge - indeed unlearning by expert teachers wil be as big a problem as
what out children need to learn; the first patern rule of system transfoirmation is that previous systems will be broken
in the sense that cretain rules a profesisonal used to apply with 100% certianlty will no longer be fit for all - and the
harder the professional tries to apply his old logic the more harm he will do

Sustsinability as a literacy every child had an education right to
be curious about did not start until after world war 2

The main lessons of world war 2 were:

we could not
afford another world war: Japan , and West Germany were set up as two of the first nations forbidden from entering an arms
race. Their citizens had a lot of work to do to rebuild from nothing but one advantage, unlike other highly edycated nations
20+% of their taxes would not be spent on arms

there would be a need for all nations to go beyond colonisation ( an
economic model where trade of colonised nations is designed around wins the empire needs - ie trade is not being designed
as win-wins and is not reguated to prirtise assistane to communities previously excluded from electricity grids and other
life develoing infrastructures)

in 1946 it was not globally recognised that mother earh would also need humans to go
beyind carbonistaion - however it started to be understood that nations should not get bigger by intentionally locking other
nations into trades that plundred any nations natural resources)

The year before the moon landing friends
of The Economist's Norman Macrae annouced Entrepreeurial REvolution as a more transparent way of designing 21st c sutsainability
goals into how human beings integrtaed every community into worldwide connectvity. The hypothesis of ER was the coming moon
landing would cause a doubling of investments oin communications technolgy every 7 yeras - ie a moores law which maintained
over 70 years 2016 versus 1946 would mean spending(2**10) over 1000 times more of peoples monet and time on coms tech.
At the time of the moon landing the expoential consequncies of the machine age industrial revolutioin which had begun slowly
in 1700sEngland were that extremely uneven in opportunities to innovate. Whilst a few thousnad computer networked peopels
raced to the moon, over a thirfd of the world's people still had no access to electricity grids. We can therefore define any
real sustainability goal as valuing some kind of collabiration (often eg educational) aheda of competition

Do you know
about Youth and Yunus's extraordinary innovation of 100000+ hubs? Each started up around 60 poor village
mothers and cultivated entrepreneurial families now connecting nearly a quarter of Bangaldesh's population. This exciting
contribution to our net generation has been integrated by 3 stages of development

between
1976 and 1995 the women structured what they wanted from community banking, knowledge sharing and village markets;

to which mobile telecom connections between hubs were added in 1996 making knowledge of market prices and vital information
more economics and empowering co-creation of clean energy and healthcare social busineses;

from
2005 yunus 3rd dimension linked in partnerships with worldwide youth and leaders shose organjsaitions had the greaest
technology resources. Today these hubs and ready to lionkin with hubs anywhere interested in EOWP - our web tries to chronicle
the 10 most exciting projects of each year - but if you think we dont know of one why note tell us at chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk

Bangladesh has been world's meta-hub of excellence for optimising sustainability economics of communities since
birth of nation in 1971, and since 1996 in mobilising youth's heroic goals united by human race to End Poverty. Since 2005
With Paris, Bangladesh has pioneered the most exciting partnerships using Social Business Models. These map Entrepreneurial Revolution networks beyond 20th C privatization structures. BUT today's worldwide financial crisis requires resolution of professions and political constitutions beyond
the dismal 20th C dynamics of externalization

Entrepreneurial
Revolution -we have mapped about 100 species of Entrepreneurial networks since Norman Macrae first branded ER in The Economist
1976 see eg http://erworld.tv and http://normanmacrae.ning.com . Or ask chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk skype chrismacraedc for a more personal tour round innovation and hi-trust leadership databases mapped over
a thrid of a century

System Innovation as conflict resolution from multi-lose model to multiwin;
from need to know to open source ; from separated systems to networks of multiplying systems

Fortunately
system transformation designers have codified extremely simple rules for hosting ER meetings- ones that school children from
9 up can be empowered to do if you let them practice. Ask for Harrison Owen's open space article on youth open spaces -
or help us organise collaboration cafes and other exciting partnership stages - out of your region

10 times increase in prodiuctivity is possible within one generation IF we unite human race by agreeing
to identify and invest in most heroic goals for 2010s

worldwide maps need to be
built bottom-up (self-organisiing) and open (co-organising) like nature. Networking economics needs to integrate
global village markets and knowhow hubs around sustainability's risng exponentials and compound investments in heroic purpose over
time.

Projects

These are the ER's new value multiplier
when they connect partners whose goals are so exciting there are many win-win-win opportunities to openly network with youth locally
and globally

Yunus at inauguration of Schneider as co-sponsor of world's
first chair of social business at HEC:The future will be decided by two key things that we have right
now. One is energy – how we bring our energy out to people’s lives – and the other is information technology.
If these two things can be combined together, the world would be a completely different placePROJECTS

2011.10

Celebrating Open Technology Roundtables @ Every Youthful City's most exciting moment of 2010s. We welcome ideas on how to do this. In October 2011 associates of Grameen Solutions and BankaBillion are plioting a technology roundtable at the same time as Washington DC's most joyful youth celebration - Yunus
testifying on how youth empowering economics works to create jobs to US congress http://grameeneconomics.com/

For Yunus a roundtable is great if new tech partnerships are signed in ways that advance solutions to millennium goals
especially in his nation of Bangladesh.

For our expected host location - French Embassy DC, success depends on linking
in to why leaders and youth across France have over the last 7 years helped make Yunus the most joyful economist
of our generation (indeed France innovated the 3rd stage of the 100000+ hub economy with Yunus). For Results members whose work with congress got two thirds of congress to issue the inviation to Yunus - working out how this roundtable
can help the world microcreditsummit near Madid in Nov 2011 is important.

For yunus earliest technology partners like
GrameenIntel and Kysushu Tech Lab recognition for what they have collaboratively started is key. For regional potential partners like
MIT we want to make the event joyous as well as productive to explore

For the one or two individuals who do
the most background work for youthandyunus in inviting technology's most youth empowering partners, we need some way of making a living from documenting the process
for future replication or sharing the case study wherever other technology advances depend on meetings' open spaces.

2011.4
For the greatest citizen portals already helping youth and yunus hub, every way we can popularise their network's
flows matters ... portals we recommend celebrating include danonecommunitiessingforhopeyytube.net

2011.9 What do you believe purpose of a country'e education curriculum leads up to? Entrepreneur
networks and this leadership flow to support job creation, and investing in youth as a place's next generation.
In 1843, The Economist as the entrepreneur's medium was founded around this second gaol as well as the more immediate one
of ending hunger caused by corn laws.

However as of 2011, the most expensive educational curriucula in the world
- the MBA are now sponsored by macroeconomists and a scary breed of global professions whose sepculative power does the
exact opposite of creating jobs and sustaining communities as family's and nature's growth spaces . Hence project
9 the Sustainability MBA and education for all ages.

Right now, we are trying to link together the few universities
whose top curricula create jobs eg MIT with yunus partnering universirties (eg HEC, Kyushu) with other nations where leaders - eg India's Kalam - are encouraging youth to tear up any curriculum at any age that is not sustainable. We are also interested in peer
to peer movements that re-educate each other such as

Historican note : our old web www.smbaworld.com came to be tangential pause while the war of goodwill versus badwill world futures spins round yunus.

2011.8

Green
& Other Social Business Stockmarkets

As of 2011 stockmarkets are deeply flawed in terms of sustainability investments

1
"Norman Macrae 1972" The global financial systems will meltdown in 2010s unless we fix the problem -stockmarkets
are not just about funding corporations, they mobiise intergeneration savings of society and the compound impacts of built
to last aneeded to advance any generation's most exciting goals

2 investments in carbon and nuclear
have been over-bidegeted and investments in green underbudgeted for decades- nowhere is a greater opportunity to recify this
than Japan and its need to lead green SB stockmarkets

2011.7 BankaBillion - 10 times
lower cost banking - in terms of transactional recodre - is now ;possible - this ought to mobilise the greatest
entrepreneurial stimulus of all time - which partnership cluster is going to lead bankabillion

2011.6 Trillion Dollar Auditing Since 1995 every media and innovation lab that I have particpated in
has come up with the same conclusion - our children will not be sustainable if professions permit the world's largest organisations
to externalise the greatst risk tgheir sector knows most about. The way to deal with this is to make risk audits public at
the scetor level of every trillion dollar market

When Keynes general system theory concluded that increasingly only
economics rules the world, it is simple to deduce that democracy itself has no reality unless it can serve the public in preventing
externalisation

2011.5 Ignoring the need for energy with a zero footprint is just one of the investments
that the top-down world has misdirected for a third of century. Oter critical sectors that are more economical community up
than tiop down are education, banking, healthcare- what do we need to do to constitutions. professions and media so that the
future conversations of sustainability are never again censored

2011.4 Because Yunus is
youth's number 1 economist its also absolutely critical to map say the (50) leaders around the world who most want to
partner resources with Yunus and identify commonalities between projects each leader most wants to help youth and
yunus with. Invitations to collaborate around these projects should be at most one click away from whatever is the internet's
most favourite homepage,

2011.3 Where royal families exist they should encorage youth and public media to celebrate
every leader who pledges to end externalsiation. Who Cares Deepest Who in nations without mature royal families may be
the make or break constitutional chalenge of the networking age.

Creativity is needed to identify how to turn
inactive assets and dormant accounts into social business loans creating work for youth matched to most heroic gaiols youth
vote for. For example, every developed nation in Europe at risk of collapsing within the Euro has dormant assets that are
far greater than its debt if we all help look.

Only multi-win models are worth the future
of youth - stories of solidarity, goodwill multiplication, transparency mapping and sustainabiliyu's exponentials

"Independence begins at the bottom... A society must be built in
which every village has to be self sustained and capable of managing its own affairs... It will be a free and voluntary play
of mutual forces... In this structure composed of innumerable villages, there will be ever widening, never ascending circles.
Life will not be a pyramid with the apex sustained by the bottom. But it will be an oceanic circle whose center will be the
individual. Therefore the outermost circumference will not wield power to crush the inner circle but will give strength to
all within and derive its own strength from it.”

A) 3 reasons why Nobel Dr Yunus spends 75% of his time living in a suitcase:

1) 18-25 year olds as where yes we can community/micro magic will stand or
fall

2) fundraising not necessarily for grameen but places that next need
a real micro most

3) Engaging leaders of the most resourced organisations
in ideas of what a partnership with a world’s poorest grassroots network could invent to reveal that sector’s
most critical sustainability responsibility

B) 5 Collaboration
games that took third of a century for Bangladeshi networks to design

-roughly
signed off in attached -

C) 7 most wondrous microsummits –what
are the 7 most audacious goals linked to all vital areas of community sustainability and ending poverty we can aim for by
2015

Microcreditsummit*2*3*4*5*6*7

.

Help us edit micro’s 10 best newslines during first 15 days of yes we can inauguration

1 day 15 yunus & bernanke meet- discussion includes changes to law needed before every american has a right to a bank account let alone a safe one

2 day 15: yunus debriefs IMF on
discussion with bernanke and other good news of microcredit networkers

3 day 6 200 staff at jp morgan and 200 members of public hear best news of decade announced by microcredit summit- pride of storytelling is given to kenya ’s jamii bora mobilisation of youth microcredit from africa ’s biggest
slum to rural grassroots

4
day 7 jamii bora’s leader Ingrid Munro briefs world bank that yes microcredit can end poverty of the very poorest

5 day 14 over 100 MIT alumni and friends including member
of MA’s legislature and various schools across the state celebrate first year of adopting malawi microcredit; in a parallel
meeting yunus debriefs harvard faculty; Boston’s convenor of collaboration 10000 (marriah star) uniquely
attends both events

6 day
15 : 1200 people at GWU (the university where obama’s yes we can slogan first came to fame) hears of yunus exploits
with bernanke and IMF; in the audience 48 youth micro-club across dc universities (led by alex simon) and an alumni group
from Yunus alma mater van der bilt; "people ask me why did the village bank start Grameen America's first branch
in the rich city of new york, I say where better to demonstrate the need for and sustainability of banking for the unbanked's
99% repayment rates

7 day
11 to 13; for the first time in 25 years self-congratulation of what a good globalisation we are spinning by the world’s
most expensive CEO disappeara; lone among optimistic voices is yunus reminding folk that crisis is also a perfect time to
change the system

8 day
8 – two new york youth (rachel and alexis) meet dr yunus and the idea emerges to start the race to catalogue 1000 social businesses out of one web- review deadline agreed with dr yunus end of june

9 day 15 yunus signs his innovation collaboration curriculum inviting 18-25 year olds to fill
it up with peer to peer modules before professors or other macro elders know its been assembled; mostofa’s briefing
at last summers Bali microcredit summit to register 5000 youth who want to transfer bangladesh micro knowledge around the
world begins in earnest

10 day1 election
of president whose mother pioneered microcredit in indonesia and whose consituency as a congressman and community builders
of s chicago is where america’s leading microcredit shorebank hubs out of

21st st DC = GWU 1500
person auditorium- In the first 15 minutes of dr yunus talk today in DC we were treated to breaking news

today
he met bernanke and explained what's wrong with the legal system that must be changed before community banking can thrive
at 10 times lower cost across usa

he met the IMF -presumably listening after hearing he'd just talked to
bernanke

alex took nearly 50 dc undergraduates to hear yunus; hopefully I have got a cheap video that I will put
up tomorrow

i also got dr yunus to sign a peer to peer collaboration mba prospectus- see attached

I
thought I had done this in glasgow at end of november but the booklet launching this has been stuck in Dhaka for 4 weeks since
dr yunus left on his world tour

I will see mostofa on sunday in london and ask if he can fix this by phone
or if I have to go to dhaka to clarify this

at the same time we will fix the youth debrief dialogue day at end of
june with yunus

I am not confident this day will work well unless at least 3 (but preferably 4) of alex, alexis,
rachel and lauren are there. I can find the travel/hotel costs from my father's microeconomics foundation but understand
you have to choose how your configure your summer dfaries

let's see how to question each other on this; I actually
love instant chat if we can get everyone there at same time

Beyond the home page, much of our web "Rumors
of What's Possible" is password locked. All we want to do is:-

spread the most
positive news of humanity but we need to know whose missions in life sees what stories as most positive- start with them,
and once a story is fun or fashionable share it with 10000 youth and then worldwide

rsvp
info@worldcitizen.tv washington DC bureau tel 301 881 1655 - if you feel you know how to help peers action one of the
25 best news stiries for humanity of 2009 -deadline for being in our 10000 dvd print run is end august 2008 but you
can still host 500 youth good news and action club in you want to connect your city with Yunus10000 (project status
pilot approved in Dhaka July 2008)

Guest Quote on MICRO - the
meaning of micro is test out a work idea with smallest resources, replicate what works with bigger resources- purposefully
sustain communities as exponentially rising -adapted from conversation with the microplanet's remarkable Peter Ryan (microloanfoundation, "small change, big changes")

Type 1: Short Videos that appeal instantly to curiosity and humanityVideo 1.1 Tough Question
From 9 Year Old

Type 2: Videos which those who network around Dr Yunus may find valuable to watch with friends and debateVideo
2.1 : Economics Joy of Social Business in Development Sectors-Learn from & with Everywhere

Breaking News Summer 008: The people's Photosynthesis
Bubbles theatre on London's SouthBank and the Queen Elizabeth Hall is not now going to happen. This is after nearly
2 years of citizen networks preparations and the wish to see photosynthesis exhibits demontrate how a carbon negative
world is possible. In due course, we will publish an inquest on why this celebration was blocked but meanwhile we are planning
something that may be even more fun a 1000-person network premier of the film used by http://www.grameenenergy.com to show that they are creating 100000 green jobs by 2012, that any sunshine state can join
in capitalising sustainability's exponentials, and that carbon negative rural economies are already developing the whole planet for early details phone Washington DC bureau of worldcitizen.tv tel usa 301 881 1655
info@worldcitizen.tv

we wish for every person actioning and connecting a better world to have a press row
seat's access to Dr Yunus- our core 08 project is videomaking with yunus. Our videos come in two types: short stories- useful for introducing friends
who may not know that there are community solutions out there for every global sustainability crisis if we shared interlocal
knowhow; deeper conversations if you want to understand more about the people who have dedicated their lives to innovating
sustainability solutions

Udpate for Rumors and Planet Dhaka after July 008 visit
to Mirpur's and Nobel Committees Opening of Future Capitalism Museum's race to End Poverty with yuNus

we
were given the extraordinary privilege to make 7 hours of video interviews of 9 of Grameen's leaders of their 25000 person community
service network, and 150 worldwide partnering to date

can we make 2 minutes of teasing silent picture footage from the
animated dialogue of the rac luncheon in february when Dr Yunus met 30 londoners in saint james http://www.saintjames.tv/ (GB's greatest world service to humanity is what?) and roll over it a caption that slowly tells
the story of updating the 25 year hunt for 30000 http://www.normanmacrae.com/netfuture.html community rising projects starting from the confluence of 2 people's experiences in Bangladesh :my dad's bangladesh economics beginning 1943 ;muhammad yunus bangladesh
economics beginning 1939?better mix in branding jingle terms
if we could identify one universally unforgetable theme tune for those youtube community-rising videos composed
of pictrures, role-over commentary and music) I quite urgently need a video which I can post out to shareholders
of The Economist as part of my dad's 3rd annual survey on : which of you actually want to use economics
to exponentially sustain the world. This could also fit with launching Tony's blog on the free market of ending poverty
at http://www.forceforgood.com/Blog/Blogs-0-0-0-0-0-n/1.aspx

can
we improve on messages on why youth are so critical to what happens next in the world, and improve the dialogue methods they
have access to -help us improve collaboration cafe's message

=======================

Post to 3 extremely
well networked women

=======================

back in 1984 dad forecast that human sustainability
would depend on a nobel laureate broadcasting to billions in a way that internetworked a search for at least 30000 community
up projects- he did this from intuition drawn from his interviews with hundreds of national leaders and microentreprenurial
knowledge of where macroeconomics had spiralled wrongly for 40 years since joining The Economist in 1950 after previously
learning economics in Bangladesh from Indian corerspondence course whlst waiting as a teenager to navigate airplanes in world
war 2

INTERGENERATION MISSIONCan you help us with our search for collaborative and sustainable entrepreneurial
franchises that can rock the world, as well as the system correcting maths that would value goodwill multplication more than
quarterly extraction of money

video 3 : when future capitalists unite world knowhow to serve the poorest of the poor, sustainable social business
models prove that the cost to market to the poor may be 10 times less (eg eyecare) to 1000 times less (eg water:
Grameen Veolia) than to rich city folk

july 2007 : five of us -sofia our chief heart, tav our chief tech wiz, mark our videomaker, mostofa our local guide around Grameen and Bangladesh, and chris whose clan's intergeneration
mission questions whose economics is it anyway? - spent a week in dhaka- granted extraordinary permission by dr
yunus to pilot project: what 25 youtube style videos would youth most enjoy debating in 2009? which
10000 youth of 2009 will make most debating and action use of a dvd of these?

dvd concept of top 30 2-minute stimuli for collaboration debates uniting humanity by ending poverty:-decision on whether we are ready to cut a first top 30 dvd will be made
in dhaka during first 2 weeks of July after a week of filming stories of local Bangladeshi heroines to complement worldwide
stories collected over the year- related workspace webs include futuresunited journalistsforhumanity and futurecapitalism - if you can help rsvp washington dc bureau of worldcitizen.tv usa 301 881 1655

Dear A&R&M

Do you have some undergrad peers or students in New York
and Boston area you could try out this speech of Future Capitalism's First 5 months on. I (with Mostofa and Mark in Dhaka)
can try to get the most inspired question to this speech asked so that Dr Yunus makes a 2 minute youtube reply to it. Whether
that will be practical in the next 4 weeks I cant promise. It seems to me that absolute prime audience for social actions
teamworking is undergraduates while they have 3 years to network together not when they are graduating. It costs under $50
a year to put up webs like http://journalistsforhumanity.com so I would be delighted to sponsor one each in an identity you
choose such as YunusNYU or Harvardforpoverty or MFIClubsUSA or LehmanUN - at minimum all we would need to put up as content
is the speech and the questions it stimulates among your networks.

I realize that R&As are very loyal to ASA.
Its my understanding that Future Capitalism is the combined 30 years-in-the-making knowledge of how to design organizations
of 100,000+ community public service workers of Bangladesh and their 25+ million female entrepreneur clients. Social Business
model 2.0 is where this really gets interesting but it needs youth around the world to demand this in several easy steps not
one quantum leap. As with all Rumors of What's Possible http://rowp.tv/ , maybe I am wrong about the urgency of this network experiment, in which case the faults mine alone , lets fail me/it
fast and get on to next FC game. Best, chris macrae us 301 881 1655

Good Morning: It
as a very special privilege for me to speak at the commencement ceremony of this prestigious institution. What a wonderful
feeling to be here today. To be with all of you, some of the brightest minds in the world, right at a moment when you decide
the path you will embark on in life. You represent the future of the world. The choices that you will make for yourself will
decide the fate of mankind. This is how it has always been. Sometimes we are aware of it, most of the time we are not. I hope
you'll remain aware of it and make an effort to be remembered not simply as a creative generation but as a socially-conscious
creative generation. Try it.

I had no idea whether my life would someday be relevant to anyone else's. But
in the mid-seventies, out of frustration with the terrible economic situation in Bangladesh I decided to see if I could make
myself useful to one poor person a day in the village next door to the university campus where I was teaching. I found myself
in an unfamiliar situation. Out of necessity I had to find a way out. Since I did not have a road-map, I had to fall back
on my basic instinct to do that. At any moment I could have withdrawn myself from my unknown path, but I did not. I stubbornly
went on to find my own way. Luckily, at the end, I found it. That was microcredit and Grameen Bank. Now, in hindsight, I can
joke about it. When people ask me, "How did you figure out all the rules and procedures that is now known as Grameen
system ?" My answer is : "That was very simple and easy. Whenever I needed a rule or a procedure in our work, I
just looked at the conventional banks to see what they do in a similar situation. Once I learned what they did, I just did
the opposite. That's how I got our rules. Conventional banks go to the rich, we go to the poor; their rule is -- "the
more you have, the more you get." So our rule became -- "the less you have higher attention you get. If you have
nothing, you get the highest priority." They ask for collateral, we abandoned it, as if we had never heard of it. They
need lawyers in their business, we don't. No lawyer is involved in any of our loan transactions. They are owned by the
rich, ours is owned by the poorest, the poorest women to boot. I can go on adding more to this list to show how Grameen does
things quite the opposite way.

Was it really a systematic policy æ to do it the opposite way ? No, it wasn't.
But that's how it turned out ultimately, because our objective was different. I had not even noticed it until a senior
banker admonished me by saying : Dr. Yunus, you are trying to put the banking system upside down." I quickly agreed with
him. I said : "Yes, because the banking system is standing on its head." I could not miss seeing the ruthlessness
of moneylenders in the village. First I lent the money to replace the loan-sharks. Then I went to the local bank to request
them to lend money to the poor. They refused. After months of deadlock I persuaded them by offering myself as a guarantor.
This is how microcredit was born in 1976. Today Grameen Bank lends money to 7.5 million borrowers, 97 per cent women. They
own the bank. The bank has lent out over $ 7.0 billion in Bangladesh over the years. Globally 130 million poor families receive
microcredit. Even then banks have not changed much. They do not mind writing off a trillion dollars in a sub-prime crisis,
but they still stay away from lending US $ 100 to a poor woman despite the fact such loans have near 100 per cent repayment
record globally. While focusing on microcredit we saw the need for other types of interventions to help the rural population,
in general, and the poor, in particular. We tried our interventions in the health sector, information technology, renewable
energy and on several other fronts. Since we worked with poor women, health issue quickly drew our attention. We introduced
health insurance. We succeeded in developing an effective healthcare program based on health insurance, but have not been
able to expand this program because of non-availability of doctors. Doctors are reluctant to stay in the villages. (It has
become such a big bottleneck that we have now decided to set up a medical college to produce doctors.) Under the program a
villager pays about US $ 2.00 a year as health insurance premium, to get health coverage for the entire family. Financially
it is sustainable.

I became a strong believer in the power of information technology to change the lives of the
poor people. This encouraged me to create a cell-phone company called Grameen Phone. We brought phones to the villages of
Bangladesh and gave loans to the poor women to buy themselves cell-phones to sell their service and make money. It became
an instant success. Seventy percent of the population of Bangladesh do not have access to electricity. We wanted to address
this issue by introducing solar home system in the villages. We created a separate company called Grameen Shakti, or Grameen
Energy. It became a very successful company in popularising solar home system, bio-gas, and environment-friendly cooking stoves.
It has already reached 155,000 homes with solar home systems, and aims to reach one million homes by 2012. As we started creating
a series of companies around renewable energy, information technology, textile, agriculture, livestock, education, health,
finance etc, I was wondering why conventional businesses do not see business the way we see it. They have different goals
than ours.

We design our businesses one way, they design theirs in another way. Conventional businesses are based
on the theoretical framework provided by the designers of capitalist economic system. In this framework 'business'
has to be a profit-maximizing entity. The more aggressively a business pursues it, the better the system functions æ
we are told. The bigger the profit, the more successful the business is; the more happy investors are. In my work it never
occurred to me that I should maximize profit. All my struggle was to take each of my enterprises to a level where it could
at least be self-sustaining. I defined the mission of my businesses in a different way than that of the traditional businesses.
As I was doing it, obviously I was violating the basic tenet of capitalist system æ profit maximization. Since I was
engaged in finding my own solution to reach the mission of my business, I was not looking at any existing road maps. My only
concern was to see if my path was taking me where I wanted to go. When it worked I felt very happy. I know maximization of
profit makes people happy. I don't maximize profit, but my businesses are a great source of my happiness. If you had done
what I have done you would be very happy too! I am convinced that profit maximization is not the only source of happiness
in business. 'Business' has been interpreted too narrowly in the existing framework of capitalism. This interpretation
is based on the assumption that a human being is a single dimensional being. His business-related happiness is related to
the size of the profit he makes. He is presented as a robot-like money-making machine. But we all know that real-life human
beings are multi-dimensional beings æ not uni-dimensional like the theory assumes. For a real-life human being money-making
is a means, not an end. But for the businessman in the existing theory money-making is both a means and also an end. This
narrow interpretation has done us great damage. All business people around the world have been imitating this one-dimensional
theoretical businessman as precisely as they can to make sure they get the most from the capitalist system. If you are a businessman
you have to wear profit-maximizing glasses all the time. As a result, only thing you see in the world are the profit enhancing
opportunities. Important problems that we face in the world cannot be addressed because profit-maximizing eyes cannot see
them. We can easily reformulate the concept of a businessman to bring him closer to a real human being.

In order
to take into account the multi-dimensionality of real human being we may assume that there are two distinct sources of happiness
in the business world æ 1) maximizing profit, and 2) achieving some pre-defined social objective. Since there are clear
conflicts between the two objectives, the business world will have to be made up of two different kinds of businesses --1)
profit-maximizing business, and 2) social business. Specific type of happiness will come from the specific type of business.
Then an investor will have two choices æ he can invest in one or in both. My guess is most people will invest in both
in various proportions. This means people will use two sets of eye-glassesæ profit-maximizing glasses, and social business
glasses. This will bring a big change in the world. Profit maximizing businessmen will be amazed to see how different the
world looks once they take off the profit-maximizing glasses and wear the social business glasses. By looking at the world
from two different perspectives business decision-makers will be able to decide better, act better, and these decisions and
actions will lead to a dramatically better world.

While I was wondering whether the idea of social business
would make any sense to the corporate world I had an opportunity to talk to the chairman of Danone Group Mr. Franck Riboud
about this subject. It made perfect sense to him right away. Together we created Grameen Danone company as a social business
in Bangladesh. This company produces yogurt fortified with micro-nutrients which are missing in the mal-nourished children
of Bangladesh. Because it is a social business, Grameen and Danone, will never take any dividend out of the company beyond
recouping the initial investment. Bottom line for the company is to see how many children overcome their nutrition deficiency
each year. Next initiative came from Credit Agricole of France. We created Grameen Credit Agricole Microfinance Foundation
to provide financial support to microfinance organizations and social businesses. We created a small water company to provide
good quality drinking water in a cluster of villages of Bangladesh. This is a joint venture with Veolia, a leading water company
in the world. Bangladesh has terrible drinking water problem. In a large part of Bangladesh tubewell water is highly arsenic
contaminated, surface water is polluted. This social business water company will be a prototype for supplying safe drinking
water in a sustainable and affordable way to people who are faced with water crisis. Once it is perfected, it can be replicated
in other villages, within Bangladesh and outside. We have already established an eye-care hospital specializing in cataract
operation, with a capacity to undertake 10,000 operations per year. This is a joint venture social business with the Green
Children Foundation created by two singers in their early twenties, Tom and Milla, from England and Norway. We have signed
a joint-venture agreement with Intel Corporation, to create a social business company called Grameen-Intel to bring information
technology-based services to the poor in healthcare, marketing, education and remittances. We also signed a social business
joint venture agreement with Saudi German Hospital Group to set up a series of hospitals in Bangladesh. Many more companies
from around the world are showing interest in such social business joint ventures. A leading shoe company wants to create
a social business to make sure that nobody goes without shoes. One leading pharmaceutical company wishes to set up a joint
venture social business company to produce nutritional supplements appropriate for Bangladeshi pregnant mothers and young
women, at the cheapest possible price. We are also in discussion to launch a social business company to produce chemically
treated mosquito-nets to protect people in Bangladesh and Africa from malaria and other mosquito-borne diseases. Your generation
can bring a breakthrough in changing the course of the world.

You can be the socially-conscious creative generation
that the world is waiting for. You can bring your creativity to design brilliant social businesses to overcome poverty, disease,
environmental degradation, food crisis, depletion of non-renewable resources, etc. Each one of you is capable of changing
the world. To make a start all that each one of you has to do is to design a business plan for a social business. Each prototype
of a social business can be a cute little business. But if it works out, the whole world can be changed by replicating it
in thousands of locations. Prototype development is the key. In designing a prototype all we need is a socially-oriented creative
mind. That could be each one of you. No matter what you do in your life, make it a point to design or be involved with at
least one social business to address one problem that depresses you the most. If you have the design and the money, go ahead
and put it into action.

If you have the design but no money, contact your dean -- he will find the money. I never
heard that MIT has problem in finding money when it has a hot idea in its hand. MIT can even create a social business development
fund in anticipation of your requests.

I can tell you very emphatically that in terms of human capability there
is no difference between a poor person and a very privileged person. All human beings are packed with unlimited potential.
Poor people are no exception to this rule. But the world around them never gave them the opportunity to know that each of
them is carrying a wonderful gift in them. The gift remains unknown and unwrapped. Our challenge is to help the poor unwrap
their gift. Poverty is not created by the poor. It is created by the system. Poverty is an artificial imposition on people.
Once you fall outside the system, it works against you. It makes it very difficult to return to the system. How do we change
this? Where do we begin ? Three basic interventions will make a big difference in the existing system : a) broadening the
concept of business by including "social business" into the framework of market place, b) creating inclusive financial
and healthcare services which can reach out to every person on the planet, c) designing appropriate information technology
devices, and services for the bottom-most people and making them easily available to them. Your generation has the opportunity
to make a break with the past and create a beautiful new world.

We see the ever-growing problems created by the
individual-centered aggressively accumulative economy. If we let it proceed without serious modifications, we may soon reach
the point of no return. Among other things, this type of economy has placed our planet under serious threat through climatic
distortions. Single-minded pursuit of profit has made us forget that this planet is our home; that we are supposed to make
it safe and beautiful, not make it more unliveable everyday by promoting a life-style which ignores all warnings of safety.
At this point let me give you the good news. No matter how daunting the problems look, don't get brow beaten by their
size. Big problems are most often just an aggregation of tiny problems. Get to the smallest component of the problem. Then
it becomes an innocent bite-size problem, and you can have all the fun dealing with it. You'll be thrilled to see in how
many ways you can crack it. You can tame it or make it disappear by various social and economic actions, including social
business. Pick out the action which looks most efficient in the given circumstances. Tackling big problems does not always
have to be through giant actions, or global initiatives or big businesses. It can start as a tiny little action. If you shape
it the right way, it can grow into a global action in no time. Even the biggest problem can be cracked by a small well-designed
intervention. That's where you and your creativity come in. These interventions can be so small that each one of you can
crack these problems right from your garage. If you have a friend or two to work with you, it is all the more better. It can
be fun too.

You are born in the age of ideas. Ideas are something an MIT graduate, I am sure, will not run out
of. The question I am raising now -- what use you want to make of them ? Make money by selling or using your ideas ? Or change
the world with your ideas? Or do both ? It is upto you to decide. There are two clear tasks in front of you -- 1) to end poverty
in the world once for all, and 2) to set the world in the right path to undo all the damage we have done to the environment
by our ignorance and selfishness. Time is right. Your initiatives can produce big results, even lead you to achieving these
goals. Then yours will be the most successful generation in human history. You will take your grand-children to the poverty
museums with tremendous pride that your generation had finally made it happen. Congratulations, for being part of a generation
which has exciting possibilities, and advance congratulations to you all for your future successes in creating a new world
where everyone on this planet can stand tall as a human being. Thank you.

Mark : DVD Besteller of Bestgift of all time

Can you find out for me what it costs to start by cutting 1000
or 10000 dvds

The idea would be to put Dr Yunus latest' s 2 minute youtube with the Prime Minister on
as number 1 feature ; backed up with all the footage you have collected to date (and the footage of the Bagladesh grassroots
organisation behind the brand and its heroines over 30 years) so that any SMBA group -or PM's tea party - can start doing
the editing of the content whichever way they want to dialogue around it cheers chris macrae

Scene 1 Greetings Prime Minister Gordon Brown: Hello How are you, what a pleasure Muhammad
Yunus: It’s a pleasure for me PM : It’s good to see you (They Shake Hands)

Scene 2 Muhammad
Yunus Introduces himself to camera from heart of 10 Downing Street I am Muhammad Yunus from Bangladesh with Grameen
bank. We lend money to extremely poor people for income generating activities. I am suggesting that Africa needs a lot of
microfinance programs – tiny loans 30 dollar, 45 dollar 100 dollar – and paid back in weekly installments. It
doesn’t need any collateral. It doesn’t need any lawyers into it but the repayment rate is very high: 98% or 99%.
Microfinance is very important because it allows people to bring out their own initiative, bring out their own capability.
And they can move on their own speed to cerate income, to get out of poverty. And people in Africa are very enterprising people,
particularly women. Microfinance focuses on women. Today in Bangladesh within Grameen Bank we have 7.5 million borrowers a-
97% of them women. The Prime Minister is very much aware of it; very supportative of it. So we will discuss how to make it
happen in Africa

Scene 3 PM and Dr Yunus relaxing round a cup of tea PM There is so much goodwill to the
work you have been doing, and it is so important

Scene 4 After tea: Muhammad Yunus denouement At the same
time, we will be discussing another concept – the social business : business to do good to people - (show copy of Dr
Yunus new bestselling book Creating a World Without Poverty- Social Business, The Future of Capitalism ). This is business
where you aim at the social objectives, not for making money for yourself. You cover your cost, make profit but the profit
doesn’t go to investors or outsiders but stays with the company to achieve the goal that you set out to help achieve
or lead.

Cluetrain to
Sustainability : www global 01What do you do if your lifetime experience provides maps that all 6.5 billion beings need to try
- to see if you have fun restoring community and ending local sustainability crises that too much top down globalisation has compounded?Bangaladesh What's Possible World's #1 Empowerment Economy : An economy growing at 7% of year because of scale of its grassroots? In a globe where most nations have become laggards
on millennial rights goals, Bangladesh is a leader. organisations?

There are
pieces of celebrating humanity's jigsaw up to 2008 that are well documented - about the Muhammad Yunus
and 7 million women's lifelong commitment to ending poverty. He has inspired many to visit Bangladesh's
and start to see best for the world grassroots organisations led such as 30000 employee strong 30+ years end-poverty
system maps of Grameen,BRAC, (you tell us info@worldcitizen.tv) . Increasingly crowds of New Yorkers from 9 and up believe he offers the simplest business school curriculum to lend your brain to.

Hi My New Years resolution week in Dhaka at the start of 2008 ended with my suggestion to Dr Yunus that
I focus on Rumors of What's Possible.

Across the World Class Brands Network which readers of my book strated
in 1990, I dont mind being a stalking horse for: what si capitalisms' or economics' truth and nonsense? - as
long as the debate includes all sides especially community-up that western global's mass media gives no real voice to.
Unlike dad, I have never studied classical economics but as mathematician I can simply map what sustainability probabilities
compound forward from goodwill and badwill systems depending on how embedded conflicts are, and how much image-making is taking
over from purposeful reality-making

Report from New York April 008: Peter, Rachel - Do either of you have James'
address the guy out of Cornell now working for new york city - I find there are various yunus & MFI relevant institutes
at Cornell and would like to see if he knows of them - Cornell is precisely the kind of place Dr Yunus would come and talk
if they offered him some long term exchange of reputations and experiences. There is also the second round of his book launch
in USA that goes after major seats of academia though I dont know when that is thanks again for wonderful evening and 3 hours
of debate on deep communities' chances of surviving the globalization we design in the next 5 years -its good to see that
New York has at least 20 people who get microeconomics' sustainability investment maps even if one is a repentant Bear
Stearns (repentant is good, when you think what peter and I have seen inside coopers & lybrand in 80s and 90s); its also
amazing to hear that other Bangladesh grassroots networks are following grameen's example and setting up foundations in
america

Next time we meet : one more topic for our roundtable : egrameen.com . Yunus'
next community-up maps buimdling on his 68 years as Win-Win-Win exploere in chief connect microhealth, micro-edu, microagri,
microgov, micro consumer branded goods. I believe that if we are to get back to sustainability world, Bangladesh's knowledge
will have probably done more than any other place to put us back on track; actually I have nearly got my father to write an
article of Bangladesh, this decade's exponential up exemplar of japan in 1960. ASK FOR COPY: If you feel this draft of
the article will cheer any banglasedhi friends on, feel free to relay it

cheers chris macrae us 301 881 1655
http://rowp.tv/ projects to dream for http://grameen.tv/_wsn/page20.html Yunus mindsets changing transcript and other emerging london booktour feb15 stories: http://worldentrepreneur.net/_wsn/page4.htmlps I have bcc the following cos I dont know who in london wants to jump into our new york conversations
at the deep end of my fools economics. 7 people who attended the RAC luncheon of Yunus and my dad: Tony Manwaring of http://www.tomorrowscompany.com/ , Robert Knowles of http://www.omniworldview.com/ , rebecca harding of world entrepreneur summits http://wes08.net/ , alan mitchell co-author of goodwill versus badwill sustainability exponential maps, and Lesley, Tav and Darlene and
Modjtaba who deeply practice or field research south africa community, ICT revolutions, ethics in microcredit and Gandhi East
versus West Modernity; also Frank Dixon, Isabel Maxwell , Mike Kiernan in USA who I dont know well enough to bury in a round
of emails, and over in bangladesh Kazi Islam who is planting a few changes in internet world that will test whether internet
for the poor is even more entrepreneurial revolutionary than banking for the poor

THE IMPORTANCE OF DR YUNUS By
Norman Macrae The Nobel Peace Prize for 2006 was controversially awarded in Oslo to a "banker for the poor"
in once basket case Bangladesh. Since the microcredit system pioneered by this Doctor Muhammad Yunus really has raised record
millions of Bangladeshi women from the world’s direst poverty, Yunus was greeted on his recent visit to London largely
by the misunderstanding Left. But as an octogenarian Thatcherite, I also had lunch with him and thrill fully to his stated
aim to "harness the powers of the free market to solve the problems of poverty", and his brave belief that he can
"do exactly that". This apparent appearance of a viable system of banking for the poor has important implications
we had better start by examining how microcredit almost accidentally came about.

START IN A STARVING VILLAGE During Bangladeshi’s terrible famine year of 1974, Dr Yunus ( who had attained his doctorate in economics in
a fairly free market American university) was back at his 1940 birthplace of Chittagong, Professor of Economics at the university
there. He took a field party of his students to one of the famine threatened villages. They analysed that all 42 of the village’s
small businesses (tiny farm plots and retail market stalls) was indeed going bust unless they could borrow a ridiculously
tiny total $27 on reasonable terms. First thought was to give the $27 as charity. But Yunus lectured that a social business
dollar that had to be paid back from careful use in an income generating activity, was much more effective than a charity
dollar which might be used only once and frittered away. All of those first 42 loans were fully repaid, and lent back, and
after 9 years further experiments Yunus in 1983 founded his Grameen (which means Village) Bank. Its priority was to make loans
that were desperately needed by the poor instead of the usual banking priority to make the safest loans to the rich who could
provide collateral against what they happened to want to borrow.

In the next 23 years, Grameen provided $6 billion
of loans to poor people with an astonishing 99% repayment rate. In 2006, it had seven million borrowing customers, 97% of
them women (who tend to be the poorer sex in rural Islamic societies) in 73000 villages of Bangladesh. Microcredit had by
then reached 80% of Bangladeshi’s poorest rural families and over half of Grameen’s own borrowers had risen above
the absolute poverty line. When a Grameen bank manager goes to a new village, he has entrepreneurially to search for poor
but viable borrowers . He earns a star if he achieves 100% repayment of loans, and another star if he attains achievement
of the 16 guarantees that all customers are asked to pledge, ranging from intensive vegetable growing through attendance of
all children at school, to abolition of dowries. A branch with five stars would often transfer to ownership by the poor women
themselves. A branch with no stars would be in danger of closing, so borrowers tend to rally round with suggestions, such
as which unreliable repayers to exclude.

An early income generator was the profession of telephone ladies. They
borrowed enough to buy a cheap mobile phone from a Grameen subsidiary. They would draw fees for phoning to see if more profitable
prices for crops were available in a neighbouring village, and from anybody who wanted to hire the phone to contact the outside
world. This is a job that could only become important in a microcredit setting; the owner of a mobile phone in richer suburbia
would not find many customers to hire her set. Village garment-makers were soon exporting clothes to far countries which made
free trade by the importing countries important. One special desire of Yunus was to improve the nutrition of poor children
in the villages of Bangladesh, and he formed a social business with the large French food multinational called Danone. Grameen-Danone
test marketed to find what sorts of fortified yogurt Bangladeshi children would like. Although Danone at first wanted large
plants with refrigerated systems, Grameen won the debate to make then small plants who bought local milk and very cheap local
distributors who knew which families had children who might buy the cheap yogurt fresh. Danone had to agree not to pay any
dividend from the sales of the yogurt in Bangladesh so as to keep the price cheap at a few US cents per cup, but its $1 million
investment remains returnable and it has learnt a lot about sales of a new product in poor countries.

THE FUTURE Will such Social Businesses spread as far as Yunus hopes? I doubt this. Great leaps like Microsoft’s invention
of good software are often made by small but initially hugely profit making small businesses. But it is easy to see a Grameen-Microsoft
social business providing software suitable for poor countries where even adults are often illiterate. My view is that the
Grameen experiment may prove to be most important for what might be called its macroeconomic impact. When more formal banking
for the rich is intermittently in crisis, this may be happening now. In this 2008, conventional bankers to the rich have trotted
in panic behind the American giants who grossly mislent on subprime mortgages, and then sold these loans on in "securitised",
and exploding and even "derivitavised" packages to weaker funds and banks who have frantically tried to disguise
from their shareholders and from themselves how unmarketable and worthless some of these assets are. If all bank statements
in early 2008 had been utterly and appallingly honest, runs by depositors out of them could already have accelerated out of
control. Such banking crises are likely to recur before and after next January when a new American president takes office.
To judge from the protectionist economic nonsense at least two of the three candidates have talked in the primaries, a tyro
president would be quite liable to bumble such a crisis into an even a 1929-1933 type of world slump. Britons should remember
that our prime minister in 1929 was our last previous dire right wing Labour Scot, and that he had to coalesce in 1931 with
a Baldwin who was as deaf as today’s Cameron to why it is better to widen budget deficits in a slump.

A
lesson in how to run village businesses and not to handle bank crises comes also from Japan. When I wrote my first book on
Japan’s economy nearly 50 years ago, Japan had about two dozen lightly taxed exporting multinationals who bought their
components marvellously cheaply. The car factories bought their ball bearings from tiny village firms, and the banks attached
to Toyota etc kept on lending even when some peasant’s first bearings did not past muster but gradually propelled him
to work with or under a brighter neighbouring peasant whose products did. That seemed inefficient to American experts and
in the early 1960’s I had a translated debate on Tokyo television with an American who said that such slack banking
would ruin the country. I rejoiced as Japan then quintupled its living standards in the next twenty years and its banks became
temporarily the most powerful and prosperous in the world. The crash came when in the late 1980s American business schools
convinced Japanese factories that components must be bought just-in-time. The big banks turned to financing suppliers who
could do this (which were not those striving to be cheapest). Banks lent mainly to new firms who could provide collateral
which meant to richer ones. Once they were lending mainly to the rich they blew up such a bubble that the nearest golf course
to Tokyo was said to have a greater land value than the whole state of California. When this bubble burst, all the banks had
bad debts, which the government helped them to hide so Japanese living standards stop rising fast since circa 1989. This is
the threat to the whole rich world today.

6 January Dhaka: After the most astonishing days of my business life,
in which I heard how DR Yunus and team have a 3 year plan to connect up the half of the world the internet has never served,
a relatively easy feat after connecting up the half of the world that banking has never served, my last 5 minutes with Dr
Y were spent presenting my commitment to an initiative- Rumors of What's Possible ... After transforming worldwide banking and the internet which of the 98 other biggest markets do womens networks need to micro-entrepreneurially revolutionise. Lets YUnUS 1000 SMBAs in each city spread
the rumors -the communal wishes to celebrate humanity - until they become brand realities. Future Capitalism has never been so interesting around this whole planet of ours.

YUnUS: perfect your system and open source it with people who come to benchmark how it
works - eg about 15 years of Grameen Dialogues:

You and others write up books on the most empowering and productive system
found on the planet

People 1 2 3 help you form the most practical global summit network ever designed -it helps remove 100 million people frommpoverty over 7 years

Suddenly all fame breaks loose - you win the Nobel prize- and now 50 times more peole read your book. And you find
that people love you to come and talk to them all over the world. There is nobody in business - let alone banking - that is
trusted from the grassroots up and cross-culturally as much as you. You have accidentally become a 21st C Business Gandhian.

So you write up a book that generalises the maps you used in banking for the poor so that it could start to be applied
in any other global market as well as planted by the young in teams doing community services which everyone apart
from the mage-makers at the top of the world is applauding. Your methods are open source; the audiences you meet love your
personal stories; but the EMP (Educators, Media-men and Professions) studiously ignore you. As Gandhi found they did when
he first discovered Stand-Up-for-Whole-Truth 101 years ago

So how do you who can spare 5 top people while
30000 get on with their grassroots service duties network to 6.5 billion people.

Something like this
is a question that Dr Yunus started asking at the end of 2007. We visited him in the fisrt week to listen. One idea - very
small - ROWP Rumors Of What's Possible

What positive gossip about your wishes for human sustainability can
we plant around the world. How can citizens and youth keep on surrounding those who command EMP?

Most of the
web pages beyond this home introduction are being transmitted bimonthly Dr Yunus. If you want to see a particular one, ask
us. We have password protected them not because they say anything top secret, but we don't have feedback on them as a
whole; we are not claiming they are more than one citizen concept of how 5 people and 6.5 million can enteract in each
other's participant productions. Indeed mail us at info@worldcitizen.tv if you have another idea on how to address this ultimate collaboration challenge of our generation, and if
we cock it up of the humanity's last few gens.

Can infrastructure projects be more sustainably run as social businesses? Will a new SMBA be the proof of this pudding as well as the answer to Sir Nick Stern's exponential disaster problems? For nearly 2 decades the implementation of privitization projects has been systematically the exact reverse of the
benefits for humanity my dad used to argue for in The Economist. Are Bangladesh's BRAC, Grameen and other grassroots models the respectable face of
privitisation?

If you have comments on the success or Grameen Mobile or the wish in Dr Yunus book for Cox's Bazaar -we'll
publish 20-liners here as long as they are curious to read - mail info@worldcitizen.tv

1 Maps: When & Why do People kill each other, civilisations, species over maps?Think treasure maps. Think wild west rushs to gold, property, lawyers- how unfair these are in lands where 99% is desert
or only support nomadi communities, and 1% is oil or other african gold. The English Empire made a law- still technically
on some accountants and other professonal high priests books which made up their monopoly rules from the same imperialism
roots - that 10% of children are born illegal (at nomadic families). Globalisation today is being governed round lose-lose-lose
maps- tangible accounting (search unseen wealth research begun 2000 Brookings Economics, Georgetown Law School -epicentre
Margaret Blair now at Yunus Alma mater Vanderbilt) spreadsheets numbers and investment into things, but requires people to be booked as costs. In consequence departmental
empires developed boxed-in workers looking after themselves not flowing information. The last time NASA lost a challenger,
the post mortem mapped 50 different cases of gung-ho people not being able to flow vital info beyond their box. We've
then been treated to a 5 year and order of magnitude more tragic replay of this with the boxed in US GI in Iraq. PLease feel
that I try like you to love ordinary people and our whole planet: Iraqi and soldier's families but not those whose systems govern with boxes and look down from a high so that they never
learn from life-critical messes they make on the ground. Cross-Culturally, every would be president should spend a few days
in an Italian town San Gimignano - please: we dont need to relay history's high rise mistakes of where not to govern
mapmaking from over and over - do we?

Trust maps are as valuable as their depth of local detail, and so contextual and communal zero-conflict flows they empower to exchange the
most vital info across borders, compounding core truths into the future. Wherever lose-lose-lose global reigns, Q&A
can help you see how the biggest organisational systems have never seen even one family of maps that multiply contextual truth, empower passionate service and communal pride.

Map Mindset Breakthrough Let's collaborate around open sourcing a new set of www win-win-win maps.
Tell us if you find a more transparent set of maps, but trust me as a maths guy these maps of YUnUS are sufficient unless
you can prove otherwise:

1 Social Action is a triangle game (3
people relationship team over one year, interacting relentlessly around one agreed human or communal value sustaining goal)
– good for youth to start up their life's first project teamwork around since triangle is the
smallest subsystem of productive and demanding human relationship mapping

2 Social Business, which is an organisation system model integrating all
communal coordinates of productive and demanding human relationships, except speculative owners who have been removed.
Consequently compound purpose ownership sustains value multiplication around deep context through system maps tuning
into service celebrating the whole of humanity and planet

3 Future Capitalism where the genius and goodwill of a social business molecule gravitates the best of both worlds: a 30000 person global
down system and a 30000 grassroots up one – eg grameen.

.

info@worldcitizen.tvwholeplanet.tv - asks people to nominate -their country's city's or network's proudest project maps that are mathematically
compatible with the social ABC frameworks 12 of Muhammad Yunus

Mapping at least 12 win-win trading routes "Belt Roads" -Silk west to middle
east through suez to med sea; Silk West from Bangladesh (girl empowerment world number2 ) to asean and china golden coastal
belt of jobs creation; with india two fifth of world people; with china express train to west europe; up the polar belt road
with arctic univeristy; with japan, korea and main diaspora superports; with africa, with latin america; with canada, pro-youth
us states; through sectors such as education belt road and green belt road and health belt road; and cultural belt road; smart nedia belt road...

Engaging over 60 national leaders in new
development banking projects often in win-win clusters and around dedicated new universities

Understand 3 billion new
jobs need to be co-created by worldwide youth if they are to be the sustainability generation

Validates which technology
(fin tech and edutech) innovators are most massively creating, connecting what

Prepared to re-examine all the ways in
which gdp is the wrong measure especially for any nation whose sustainability culture that lives up to women lift up half
the sky

African
New Development banking -ADB could become this eg if mandela not zuma values inspire africa from 2018 on - more to watch

silk
belt road bank - various structures concerned with reconciling borders of nations critical to the southern belt of eurasia
much of which british raj dominated until world war 2 -previously up to 1500s the med sea facing nations and china belt nations
enjoyed the most positive win-win trades- how did 20th c end up with med sea nations borders becoming the biggest refugee
and armed crises

baiib.org informal british american iib asks how can english lnguage banking reform to connect positively with edu and banking
need of under 30s becoming sustainability generation by 2030

new olympicsbanking - infpormal network auding wheher tokyo and other greatest communities for ll expos chnage the value chian of superports
and global celebrations back to sustainability

nomination of new development education and banking welcome
- isabella@unacknowledgedgiant.com

join 40 year debate of thie 1984 essay on new development bankingchapter 6 ...more